I will just tell you how I see this, deep down. There are 308 members' offices, so 308 people—minus one, since there has been a resignation—that you could enlist to help you. We organize press conferences, we talk to local newspapers and we meet with people. The people who work in our offices are by definition a way for you to communicate. You have apologized, and I thank you for that. It is a good thing when people are able to acknowledge that it will be possible to do better next time.
Some members have regional ridings. My colleague, for example, is fortunate that he is right beside the passport office. When it comes down to it, 100 or 150 MPs naturally act as agents for you in a way. I am sure that they are generally pleased to help.
For us, however, dealing with these people involves costs. Those are costs that you do not have to assume, since you do not see these people in your offices. I would bet that when those passport envelopes arrive in your offices by express courier—a service that is costing me four times as much every week as it did a few months ago, by the way—you generally find that the application has been filled out properly. I am sure that this applies to all my colleagues. After all, we do not want people in our riding telling us that their photos were not acceptable or that the signature was not in its proper little box. I invite you to take advantage of the fact that we are here to serve our constituents. That would be enough to reassure me a great deal.